My mom’s name is Mary Jo. I still think she’s the prettiest
lady in the world. Her half Irish, half Slavic
face in repose is kind and patient. She doesn’t like to cook and her house is immaculately
clean. She has a picture of Tupac Shakur in her bathroom. She’s a teacher by trade which explains her innate ability to attract the
attention of the room when she walks through the door. Her voice is quiet and kind and her laugh is
infectious. I remember once sitting in church, the priest said something and my
mom could not stop laughing. When my mom
can’t stop laughing, no one can. I started and then my dad and siblings. Our family of 5 quietly exited the church one
by one because we could not control ourselves.
That’s my mom. She’s classy and
gracious and fun and can shot gun a beer in under 5 seconds. My advice would be to not challenge her in
this area.

Growing up, my mom made me feel safe. I was comforted knowing she was there. And
she was there for everything. Every sing-along, Halloween parade, Christmas
party and field trip. Every softball
game, school dance, graduation, everything.
In elementary school, a boy named Justin spit in my hair on the way home
from school because I wasn’t of the predominant faith. My mom calmly helped me wash my hair even
though she was shaking with anger. She
always took care of me first. I sometimes wonder what happened to that boy...I'm sure he works at a car wash. In middle
school, there were a group of girls that teased me for the very same
thing. My mom took me out to dinner and
shopping and made me feel like none of that mattered. That those girls didn’t matter, only me. I know her heart hurt seeing me hurt but my mom had the strength and tenacity to let me fight my own battles and I'm a better person for it.
Mom, I get it now. I
get all of it. I understand the love
that you have for me because I have that for my own kids. There are not enough
words for me to describe how I feel about you. So, let me just say thank
you. Thank you for always putting me
first, for sacrificing your needs for mine.
When there were only 4 pieces of cake left for dessert, you said “ I don’t
really like that kind of cake” and you always ate the burnt toast. Thank you for giving
me advice; sometimes it’s advice that I don’t want to hear, but I appreciate your
honesty and ability to put things in perspective for me. Thank you for giving
me tough love when I needed it most. You walked in front of me as a child, setting an example. You walked behind me as a teenager in case I needed you. And now you're my dearest friend. You
were right about everything. I’ll never
know how you put all three of us through school while managing to fund all of
our little side projects. You never showed it but I know there were so many
times you felt like you failed but in my eyes and in my mind you are supermom. You never gave up. You did what I feel like is
impossible now. You made this mom gig look easy.
You’ve instilled in me a sense of resilience and hopefulness
and enthusiasm for life and I know I will give that to my own kids as well. In
one way or another, in everything I do, you are always my point of reference. There
is a reason I think I can do anything. It’s because I listened to you.
I love you mom. Happy Mother’s Day!
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